Day: September 30, 2019

Monday Finish: Cameron Champ wins one with feeling at Safeway OpenMonday Finish: Cameron Champ wins one with feeling at Safeway Open

NAPA, Calif. – Tony Romo got more than halfway to making his first PGA TOUR cut, Stephen Curry entertained in the pro-am, and Phil Mickelson showed off his new physique. But no story was more compelling than that of Cameron Champ. On a day that was fraught with emotion, Sacramento native Champ made a clutch birdie on 18 to edge Adam Hadwin by one, then dedicated the victory to his paternal grandfather, Mack “Pops� Champ, who got him started playing the game and was watching it all play out on TV while in hospice care back home. Welcome to the Monday Finish. THREE KEYS TO SUCCESS 1. Champ was playing for more than himself. Grandpa Mack was denied the opportunity to play golf for years, but taught himself the game while stationed overseas in the Air Force. He made sure Cameron had the opportunities he did not, buying the boy a set of plastic clubs and setting up games in which they played what Cameron termed “jack it around the backyard� golf. Now, though, Mack is in hospice back with Stage IV stomach cancer in Sacramento. Cameron said his grandfather’s situation put golf in perspective, and dedicated the victory to Mack. For more on Champ, click here. 2. He got back at the par 5s. One day after failing to birdie any of the par 5s, Champ, one of the game’s longest hitters, birdied three of the four when he needed it most. No birdie was bigger than the one he made on 18, after Hadwin had birdied three straight to briefly tie for the lead. Champ reared back and hit easily the longest drive of the day on the hole, leaving himself just an 8-iron second shot into the final par 5. He came up short, but with his father, Jeff, and a large contingent of other family and friends on pins and needles, made a clutch up and down to win.   3. He led the field in driving distance, with no drive more crucial than his 369-yard missile at the last. The shot was 33 yards longer than the next longest on 18 in the final round, and set him up for a final birdie to edge Adam Hadwin by one. But Champ’s brawny game also paid dividends at the end of the front nine, when after his drive missed left of the fairway he was somewhat blocked out by the trees at the par-5 ninth hole. No worries. Into the wind, Champ blistered a 232-yard long iron around the tree to just in front of the green, and got up and down for birdie. OBSERVATIONS Hadwin reminds how good he is: There’s still time to impress International Presidents Cup Captain Ernie Els, and Adam Hadwin (67, solo second) is on the right track. His play at the Safeway marked his best finish on the PGA TOUR since winning the 2017 Valspar Championship. “I feel like I’m continuing some of the momentum coming from last year,� he said. “Results didn’t show it, but I was playing some pretty good golf at the end of last year, I just couldn’t put weekends together. To go out, make eight birdies today, I think, on what can be a difficult golf course, depending on where you put your golf ball, I’m proud of the way I played, proud of the way I fought, and yeah, hopefully good things to come.�   Leishman’s back feeling better: It wasn’t that long ago that Marc Leishman had to withdraw from A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier with back pain. “It’s feeling good,� he said after signing for 65, which was tied with Canada’s Corey Conners for the lowest round of the day. “… Been getting treatment. It was a little stiff at the start of the week, but it got better as the week went on, which was nice. Yeah, feeling good again. Happy with how I’m striking it.�    Thomas off to strong start: Justin Thomas (69, T4) opened the new season with another top-five finish, his third straight and the second time in his career that he has posted three in a row. This, after a melanoma scare led to leg surgery and limited some of his preparations for the Safeway. “I just need to keep doing what I’m doing,� he said. “I played very well this entire week, I felt like. I hit a lot of really good putts that just didn’t quite drop, or some things here or there. … Just get ready for Korea and Japan, but just try to get the game sharp and get some rest next week, and see if we can try to go get one or two over in Asia.�    QUOTEBOARD “At least I made him think about it a little bit, didn’t I?� – Hadwin (67) after his three closing birdies briefly tied Champ atop the leaderboard. “I didn’t panic.� – Champ, who bogeyed 17 but won with a birdie at the par-5 18th. “It’s a strange game, isn’t it?� – Marc Leishman (65, third), who birdied from over 23 feet on 18 after having missed twice from inside 6 feet on 16 and 17. “It’s just big for the confidence to get it done and play well.� – Zac Blair (68, T4) SOCIAL SNAPSHOT

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Meet the rookies: Matthew NeSmithMeet the rookies: Matthew NeSmith

Each week during the fall, PGATOUR.COM will highlight one of the rookies playing on the PGA TOUR during the 2019-20 season. This week: Matthew NeSmith, who’s in this week’s field at this week’s Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. Age: 25 Birthplace: North Augusta, South Carolina Resides: Columbia, South Carolina College: University of South Carolina TOUR card gained by: Finishing 1st in the Korn Ferry Tour Finals. TOUR starts/Best finish: 8/missed all eight cuts, but missed by only one shot at A Military Tribute at The Greenbrier. MEET THE ROOKIES: Bo Hoag | Michael Gellerman | Nelson Ledesma Pro highlights: Started Sunday three back but shot 64 to beat Viktor Hovland by one at the Albertsons Boise Open presented by Kraft Nabisco, for his first Korn Ferry Tour title. … Top-10s at Ellie Mae Classic at TPC Stonebrae (led through 36 and 54 holes but finished T8), Nashville Golf Open Benefitting the Snedeker Foundation (T6), and The Bahamas Great Exuma Classic at Sandals Emerald Bay (T9). …  Finished runner-up at 2016 Mackenzie Tour PGA TOUR Canada Q School … Shot a bogey-free 6-under 66 in the opening round of the Safeway Open, leaving him just one shot off the 18-hole lead, but shot 77 in Round 2 to miss the cut. Amateur highlights: As a senior at South Carolina, he became first Gamecock to win twice in less than one week (five days), and first to earn PING First Team All-America honors. … Is the school’s all-time leader in top-10 finishes (25) and scoring average (71.65). … As a junior golfer in 2012, won AJGA’s Rolex Tournament of Champions and FootJoy Invitational, the latter event, at Sedgefield Country Club, earning him a start at 2012 Wyndham Championship (MC). Interesting tidbits: Does not look at leaderboards and did not know the 15-footer at the last was for the win in Boise. (He made it.) … Proposed to his wife, Abigail, on the 18th green at Harbour Town Golf Links. … Has volunteered to build bikes for needy families at Christmas. … Has been involved with Curing Kids Cancer, where wife has worked. … Brother is a celebrity photojournalist in New York City.   NeSmith says (after winning Albertsons Boise Open): “It was time to do something. I had kind of been hanging around mini tours for a couple of years and Canada, and I finally got out here. I’ve played solid all year-round. I just never really could figure it out, and then I started playing well at the end of the year and got in the Finals … and then anything can happen.� For more on Matthew NeSmith, click here.

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